17 February, 2007

New Moratorium

New Moratorium. I do not know how many of you read the item in the Anguillian Newspaper http://www.anguillian.com/article/articleview/4336/1/140/ concerning the new moratorium on land sales announced by government. It brings a halt for a period of six weeks commencing on 31 January to the processing of Aliens Landholding Licences for all land in Anguilla, whether undeveloped land or buildings. This moratorium does not apply to land that has previously been alienated!

The announced purpose published in the paper is to “allow the Government to carry out a review to determine the impact of such licences on the economic and social development of the island.”

On Elkin Richardson’s call in radio programme “To the Point” recently, Minister Victor Banks gave as a second reason, “that they were concerned about the rising cost of labour and ensuring that such costs remained affordable for Anguillians”.

Then, in practically the last paragraph of the newspaper story, appears the following ominous sentence: “Notwithstanding the six-week suspension, as approved by the Governor in Council, the Government reserves the right to consider any application for an Alien Landholding Licence as the particular circumstances of the case may merit or as the Governor in Council may otherwise consider." There are no rules that apply to help the ministers decide who to approve and who not to. It is a matter entirely in the unfettered discretion of the ministers.

The clear meaning of this is that any foreigner who can persuade the ministers that his case deserves special merit will not be prohibited. The Anguillian who is in the good books of the ministers will have no difficulty in pushing his case. It is the foreigner who is not “persuasive” and the local Anguillian who can’t show the “merit of his case” who is caught.

A friend who should know now tells me that basically the ministers will not be processing licences for the next six weeks, and thereafter it will be on a case by case basis.

Has anyone thought out the implications of this new policy? Do I understand that this means that all Anguillians are now barred for six weeks from selling to foreigners who pay the big bucks? Condo and villa sales by Flag, Viceroy and Altamer can go ahead, but you and I can only sell to each other? Only foreigners whose property is already alienated can sell to the rich foreigners who are paying the best prices? Thereafter, it is only those who can “persuade” the ministers on a case by case basis who will be allowed to convert their land to cash?

Can someone tell me, what genius thought that this was an appropriate alternative to having a proper policy?

Is this a case of “openness, transparency and accountability” just being something we say?




2 comments:

  1. Does the moratorium apply to the new five star resort at Long Bay that seems to be a State Secret, but which was announced in America in November 2006 but not here?

    Read all about it at http://www.hotelmotel.com/hotelmotel/article/articleDetail.jsp?id=388745 where it was announced as follows:

    “NEW YORK, November 28, 2006 - Carlton Hospitality Group (CHG), a division of real estate investment bank The Carlton Group, has been retained on an exclusive basis to secure financing in ten hotel transactions, announced Carlton Chairman Howard L. Michaels and Hospitality Group President John Bralower. The value of the deals is in excess of $1.7 billion.
    The transactions are as follows:
    . . .
    - $205 million acquisition and development financing of Long Bay Resorts, Anguilla - The financing will be used for development of a five-star luxury resort located on 21.5 acres of pristine beachfront in Anguilla. . . .”

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  2. This is alarming on several fronts. If they can suspend land sales for only six weeks, it suggests they must be getting more than a 100 applications a week. How about suspending for six years? We are now seeing that the UF government are incapable of direction and does not know how to operate in this new Anguilla state of luxury resorts and innovative technology. The investors are playing cart wheels around them. Time for Anguilla to get leaders who can operate in the 21st Century with a social agenda can bring us out of this social funk.

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